Word: inhibits
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
This gives outside students the opportunity to study an area of special interest or under a particular professor, Bok said, and "might offset the imbalance and make it unnecessary to inhibit spring leaves...
That, however, did not inhibit the combative Victor Gold, Agnew's former press secretary and still a close associate. Gold put the blame for the stories squarely on Alexander Haig and Melvin Laird, Nixon's two top aides, who he said were following a familiar White House pattern in trying to undermine the Vice President as Nixon's most likely successor in 1976. Said Gold: "First we had Haldeman and Ehrlichman; now we have Haig and Laird; next we'll have Sonny and Cher...
Davis said that during the first year of the grant a research staff will study the factors which inhibit women from entering the health professions. The researchers will also try to identify the areas of primary health care delivery that will need greater attention, and to select those areas that will best be served by the talents of women...
Most male administrators and senior faculty still assume that the wife will have the primary responsibility for child-rearing. While for most couples this is still the arrangement, this typecasting has led to many policy decisions which inhibit or prevent women and men from rearranging traditional family roles...
...time for the kidding to stop. Women don't meet together for the purpose of excluding men: they meet for the purpose of talking to other women. And male presence -- which often results in male dominance -- can inhibit discussion or even consideration of sensitive issues. Women at this University deserve the same kind of respect that should be paid to blacks, Jews, Chicanos, or any other group that decides it must draw inward to gather strength to resist those who abuse it. But when confronted with the analogy to blacks, one of the Holmes Hall males chimed...